Europe sounds alarm on illiterate, early school-leavers



BRUSSELS- With Asia's youth out-performing Europe's, the continent sounded the alarm Tuesday over the masses of poor readers and early school-leavers due to join unemployment queues snaking across the continent.
One in five 15-year-olds in Europe lacks the basic reading and writing skills needed on the job market, compared with six percent in Korea, 10 percent in Canada and 14 percent in Japan, the European Commission said.



"We are frankly failing these children and we must act now," commissioner for education Androulla Vassiliou told the press.
To top off the bleak picture, almost a third of the adult workforce -- 80 million people -- are estimated to have only low or basis skills in literacy.
"Many simply cannot cope with the daily requirements of social and economic life," she added.
The dramatic figures come as experts forecast a giant drop in the market for unskilled workers in Europe, with jobs requiring high qualifications expected to increase by 35 percent by the end of the decade, against 29 percent now.
"These people will increasingly find themselves knocked out of the labour market and society," Vassiliou added.
To facilitate efforts to improve literacy, the European Union on Tuesday set up a high-level panel of experts, chaired by Dutch Princess Laurentien, also a UNESCO literacy envoy. It is to offer proposals by mid-2012 to improve literacy.
Its launch came a day after the commission issued a separate action plan on the equally dire problem of the EU's more than six million early school-leavers -- meaning 14.4 percent of youngsters quit class with few qualifications.
That problem varies hugely across the 27-nation bloc, hitting one in three young people in Malta, Portugal and Spain and one in 10 in seven member states -- Austria, Czech Republic, Finland, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia.
The EU is offering funding to help reduce early school leaving and is putting its guidelines up for discussion by the bloc's education ministers.
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Tuesday, February 1st 2011
AFP
           


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